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Triodopsis obsoleta

Image Usage Information

  • The Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia
  • CC BY-NC 4.0 DEED
  • For additional information about this specimen: Gary Rosenberg (rosenberg.ansp@drexel.edu)

Family: Polygyridae

Common name: Nubbin Threetooth

Discovery: Pilsbry, 1894

Identification

Width: 10-13 mm
Height: 6-8 mm
Whorls: 4.5-6.0

This small coastal threetooth has a depressed heliciform shell with three barriers in the aperture, like many of its genus, though those three teeth are small and weak – “obsolete.” The open umbilicus of Triodopsis obsoleta is narrow and shallow. Pilsbry (1940) describes this animal only in relation to T. hopetonensis.

Ecology

As currently designated, Triodopsis obsoleta lives on the Coastal plain of the Middle Atlantic. It can be found on low, wet ground, especially in swamps and urban areas (Hubricht 1985).

Taxonomy

Triodopsis obsoleta, like T. messana, is another close relative of T. fallax whose taxonomy is not firmly established. Synonyms for T. obsoleta include: Polygyra fallax obsoleta, P. hopetonensis obsoleta, Triodopsis fallax obsoleta, T. hopetonensis chincoteagensis, T. h. obsoleta, and T. palustris.

Distribution

This species is only known from the Atlantic coasts of Maryland, Virginia and North Carolina. In Virginia it is found in the central and southeastern coast.

Conservation

NatureServe Global Rank: G4
NatureServe State Rank: S3

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